Hi all,
Are there people doing anything interesting with this chip?
I have a PCI board with 13 ZISC chips and I'm writing a Java
JNI DLL that wraps the C APIs shipped with the hardware. This
way my GUI can be written entirely using the Java Foundation
Classes (JFC). Since all of the work is being done in hardware
the lack of execution speed of the language should not be a
factor.
I have several ideas for projects and a theoretical background
in Neural Networks. Now that I have a chance to implement something
I'm finding out that if I don't watch myself Garbage In WILL generate
Garbage Out. I'm struggling with how my data should be normalized
and presented to the NN hardware (how many inputs, and so on).
I have the PCI card plugged into my home PC, and I'm trying a few
project
to see if I can come up with something useful. I can't dedicate as much
time to this work as I would like to, but it makes for a nice hobby.
I have collected a whole bunch of articles on Radial Basic Function
Neural Networks' theory and their applications. It would be nice to hear
from others that are actually doing work with this chip.
Bernie Arruza
IBM Manufacturing Technology Center
Boca Raton, Fl
Ian Kemmish wrote:
>> In article <35d04383.0 at news.victoria.tc.ca>, mentifex at scn.org says...
>> >Now there is http://www.fr.ibm.com/france/cdlab/zisc.htm ZISC, or
> >Zero Instruction Set Computing, in the form of a neural-net chip.
>> ``Now''? John Conway was teaching this in his second year mathematics courses
> in the late '70s at Cambridge, and I remember seeing it in at least one of his
> recreational books. I've also mentioned it more than once here.
>> Wake up, lad....
>> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> Ian Kemmish 18 Durham Close, Biggleswade, Beds SG18 8HZ, UK
>ian at five-d.com Tel: +44 1767 601 361
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> Behind every successful organisation stands one person who knows the secret
> of how to keep the managers away from anything truly important.